Occupying the entire space, the exhibition features two new ‘solid-light’ installations, McCall’s seminal horizontal work Doubling Back, 2003, and a curated selection of black and white photographs, a number of which will be exhibited in the US for the first time.

A Broken Stream, an exhibition of video, sculpture, drawing and painting by Tauba Auerbach. Working in several new media, Auerbach will probe fluid behaviors alongside new theories of anatomy, mind and the cosmos.

The show illuminates the breadth, depth, and interconnectedness of the artist’s production: from his beginnings as a commercial illustrator in the 1950s, to his iconic Pop masterpieces of the early 1960s, to the experimental work in film and other mediums from the 1960s and 70s, to his innovative use of readymade abstraction and the painterly sublime in the 1980s. The show features more than 350 works of art, many assembled together for the first time.

The show explores the range of Bourgeois’ spiral motifs as expressed in sculpture, painting, and drawing, from the early 1950s through 2010. In materials as diverse as wood, steel, bronze, latex, marble, plaster, resin, hemp, lead, ink, pencil, crayon, woodcut, watercolor, and gouache, Bourgeois investigates every imaginable manifestation of the spiral.

Kunath carries on his study of a dichotomous human condition—an exploration in happiness and sadness, romanticism, nostalgia, longing, the fetish of authenticity, and the myth of genius. The exhibition displays Kunath’s recent airbrush, and impastoed oil paintings alongside his bronze sculptures.

One of the most original and influential photographers of the twentieth century Diane Arbus’ (b.1923–1971) sixty-six images were made at residences for people with developmental disabilities places between 1969 and 1971. The show includes several images that have never before been exhibited.

The new exhibition by Nick Cave If a Tree Falls explores a crucial underlying component of personal and collective states – the state of the American nation. Cave creates a space of memorial through combining found historical objects with a contemporary dialogue on gun violence & death.

The Modernist : the photography series and related film—Opie’s first—offer a distinct narrative arc as they follow a fictional artist character on an arsonist spree across Los Angeles, targeting the city’s iconic modernist buildings.